Subject: Inmate phone calls
You will have to let them know. We offer a free letter to notify the inmate of their new number, email us and request a coupon code.
Subject: Send inmate mail
The best photos are the sexy ones you know he'll like. You know that they cannot show your private parts or simulated acts, make sure everything is covered so that they are not rejected.
Subject: Inmate search
Duplicate listings across facilities are more common than you might expect, particularly when an inmate has been recently transferred and both the old and new facility records have not yet been fully updated in the database. It creates confusion but it is usually a timing issue rather than a mystery.
The most reliable tool for locating current custody status is VINELink at vinelink.com. VINE stands for Victim Information and Notification Everyday, and while it was built primarily as a victim notification...
Read moreSubject: Inmate phone calls
The facility is not going to deliver that information for you. Staff are not in the business of passing phone numbers from outside parties to inmates, and while occasionally an empathetic officer will make an exception, that is not something you can count on or plan around.
The reliable way to get the number to her is through mail. Send a letter or postcard to Gilpin County Detention Center with the InmateAid number written clearly inside. That piece of mail will...
Read moreSubject: Prison discipline
Yes, both are significantly restricted the moment someone goes into the SHU, and the limitations are more severe than most families expect going in.
Phone access drops to one 15-minute call per week. That is it. Whatever frequency of calls you were used to before the hole is gone, replaced by a single weekly window that has to count for everything. Make sure your number is active and you are available when that call comes because there is no rescheduling it...
Read moreSubject: Visitation
You might find that attitude in any walk of life. The cashier at Walmart, the nurse at your doctor's office or the deli man at the grocery could all have "a bad day". For you to think that YOU need to kiss their ass is an indictment on your attitude. WAKE UP, this isn't a hotel or restaurant. The guards are not social workers, they are paid to oversee prisoners, not patrons. YOU follow their rules without arrogance or don't...
Read moreSubject: Family services
ThisĀ is not impossible - keep trying
Subject: Inmate phone calls
On the minutes, yes, the standard plan runs 300 minutes per month. The exception comes during the holiday season. In November and December the Bureau of Prisons increases the allotment to 400 minutes to account for the higher volume of family calls during that time of year. That extra hundred minutes makes a real difference during the stretch of the year when staying connected matters most.
On computers, federal facilities do have them, but they are not the open internet access...
Read moreSubject: Parole & probation
The specific conditions are not handed to you in advance. They are delivered at the initial supervision interview, which happens immediately after release with the probation agent assigned to the case. That first meeting is not optional and sets the foundation for everything that follows.
At that interview the probation agent walks through every condition of supervision individually and the probationer signs off acknowledging they understand each one. From that point forward, those conditions are the rulebook, and violating any of...
Read moreSubject: Inmateaid website questions
InmateAid tracks the outgoing side of the process, not the delivery confirmation at the facility end. Here is what that means in practice.
When you place an order, a confirmation email goes out with the details of what was sent and when. From there, everything ships through the United States Postal Service, and standard USPS transit times apply. The general window is two to three business days from the date of mailing to reach the facility's mailroom, though destination and distance...
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